FMCSA Chief: Safety Benefits when Agency Partners with Trucking

PHILADELPHIA — The acting chief of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration committed the agency to working even more closely with trucking’s stakeholders to improve highway safety in his address here on Oct. 18 to the American Trucking Associations' Management Conference & Exhibition.

FMCSA Chief Counsel T.F. Scott Darling III stated that “there are 1,100 FMCSA employees making a difference [to improve safety], but we need partnerships [with trucking interests] to accomplish more. That’s why next year we will continue to push for partnerships” to help advance rulemakings.

Darling remarked that the agency “depends on truck drivers and their companies to deliver goods and we need them to operate safely.” He said that FMCSA and trucking “must do all we can to take unsafe drivers and carriers off the road.”

He said that effort yielded data from more than 220 drivers as well as from trucking companies. “All the data points are being examined and we plan to submit our report to the [DOT] Office of the Inspector General in the coming months.”

Darling also said that, thanks to stakeholders “participating fully in the process,” the agency is completing a rulemaking on entry-level driver training despite “a compressed timeline” and said that is scheduled to be published by the end of the year.

As for the highly anticipated final rule that will mandate the use of electronic logging devices, Darling said it is “to be published soon.” He said that once it’s in effect, it “will save [an estimated] 20 lives and prevent more than 400 injuries a year and will improve [hours-of-service] compliance.”